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December 17, 2013

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Russia stations missiles closer to Europe

Russia has moved nuclear-capable Iskander missiles closer to Europe’s borders in response to the US-led deployment of a disputed air defense shield, the defense ministry said yesterday.

The advanced version of the Russian missile has a range of 500 kilometers and could potentially be used to take out ground-based radar and interceptors of the new NATO shield.

Germany’s Bild newspaper first reported over the weekend that Russia had deployed about 10 Iskander systems in its Kaliningrad exclave, wedged between Poland and Lithuania, at some point over the past 12 months.

A top Russian defense official said in response to the report that several Iskander batteries had been stationed in Russia’s Western Military District — a region that includes the exclave and also borders the European Union’s three Baltic nations that were once a part of the Soviet Union.

“Iskander operational-tactical missile systems have indeed been commissioned by the Western Military District’s missile and artillery forces,” Russian news agencies quoted defense ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov as saying.

He added Russia’s deployment “does not violate any international treaties or agreements” and should therefore not be subject to protests from the West.

The Kremlin warned in 2011 that it could station the short- and medium-range ballistic missiles along the European Union’s eastern frontier in response to NATO’s missile defense program.

Both the US and the Western military alliance have argued that the shield is not aimed at Russia but is designed to protect the West from potential threats from so-called “rogue states.”

But Moscow fears the system — whose components include missile-positioning satellites — may one day be turned into an offensive weapon that targets Russian soil.

The Kremlin also believes the shield could in the future be expanded to a point that makes Russia’s own nuclear arsenal ineffective.

The daily newspaper Izvestia quoted Viktor Zavarzin, a deputy head of the defense committee in the lower house of Russian parliament, as saying the Iskander is needed to counterbalance NATO forces in Europe, including US tactical nuclear weapons.

“We aren’t threatening anyone. These are defensive systems,” Zavarzin said, according to the newspaper.

The advanced version of the missile — known as the Iskander-M — was one of Russia’s first major post-Soviet weapons.

It is now among its most prized military exports.

 




 

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